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    No major Indian city achieved safe air quality levels in a decade: Study

    2 min read

    Air Quality in Indian Cities

    Over the past decade (2015-November 2025), no major Indian city has achieved a safe Air Quality Index (AQI) level. The study focused on 11 Indian cities and highlighted significant issues related to air pollution.

    Key Findings

    • New Delhi remains one of the worst performers with an AQI around 180 in 2025, classifying it as the most polluted city throughout the decade.
    • Winter smog is persistent, especially in the Indo-Gangetic region, due to meteorological and geographical factors.
    • Cities like Kolkata, Mumbai, Chennai, Chandigarh, and Visakhapatnam have experienced moderate, yet unsafe AQI levels.
    • Bengaluru had the cleanest air among metros, but its AQI was still above the 'good' category.

    Regional Observations

    • In North and West India, cities such as Lucknow, Varanasi, and Ahmedabad consistently showed high, unhealthy AQI levels.
    • A decrease in farm fires did not notably improve Delhi's air quality, suggesting that local pollution sources and meteorology are primary factors in severe winter smog.

    Study Insights

    • The absence of significant rainfall in October and weak western disturbances exacerbated early smog formation by eliminating natural pollutant washout.
    • Air pollution in India is described as a national, persistent, and structural issue due to urbanization, traffic, industry, and seasonal factors.

    Recommendations

    • There is a need for systemic and science-based policy efforts to address air pollution.
    • Despite recent policy interventions and technological improvements, Indian cities still face air quality challenges.
    • More aggressive pollution-control strategies, sustained enforcement measures, and long-term urban planning reforms are essential.
    • Tags :
    • Air Pollution
    • AIr Quality Index
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